1975-76 Topps Basketball #300 Julius Erving Basketball card

Price = $ 35

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Below are some tidbits on baseball and sportscard collecting.
Visit our web site for more info on vintage and current
baseball, football, basketball, hockey, sports and
non-sport cards and card collecting.

Q3: Are sports cards valuable ?

Like all collectibles, some sports cards increase in value and a few can become very valuable.
Determining a card's value is based on a number of factors including the popularity
of the player, the card's scarcity, it's condition, and demand among collectors.
A card can be scarce but if there's no demand for it, it's value may not be to great.

Q: What are some of the ways to collect cards ?
There are several different ways to collect cards. For example, you can try to
collect all the cards in a given set. Or you can focus on cards of your favorite
team or even just your favorite player.

Some people only collect Rookie cards while others only collect cards of
Hall-of-Famers. Because of the high cost of vintage sports cards today a growingly
popular way to collect sportscards is "Type Collecting".

"Type Collecting" is collecting just one of each "type" (or different issue) made.
To keep costs down, on some of the scarcer more expensive issues you can simply
add a less expensive "common" to your collection. While on more common or recent
issues you can select your favorite player or a card from your favorite team.

No matter how you collect - the key is to have fun !

The issue below is featured elsewhere on this website:

1974 Topps DECKLE EDGE

This 72-card test issue set was released with a very limited distribution
on only the East Coast around Massachusetts making them quite scarce.
They were Officially simply called "Topps Baseball Photos"
but their serrated or "DECKLED" edge gave them the name they go by today.
The 2 7/8" x 5" inch cards were sold in either a 2 card pack
with gum or a 3 card pack with no gum for 5 cents.

The cards were meant to have the look
of the black and white movie star photos from the 1950's and feature a
black & white photo with a blue facsimilie autograph on the front.
The backs make this very scarce test issue even more interesting !
They feature handwritten script of the player's name, team, position & date
and location of the photograph as well as a mock newspaper article on the
player's career.

This was Topps 2nd "Deckle Edge" issue, their first being their smaller
and much more common 1969 Topps Deckle Edge which were inserts in
certain series of packs of 1969 Topps cards.

Variations of 1974 Topps Deckle Edge do exist,
making this issue even more fun and challenging to collect.
The backs can be found in either gray or a much scarcer white version.
Also, a more limited proof version with non-scalloped edges exists and
occasionally can be found.

1960 Nu-Card Baseball Hi-Lites

This 72-card set of oversized (3-1/4" x 5-3/8") cards Issued by Nu-Card, Inc., featured baseball highlights (hi-lites). Printed in red and black, the card
fronts resemble a newspaper's front page headline story with photo.
The cards showcase some of the baseball's most interesting highlights
in it's first 100 years of baseball.

Card #'s 1-18 can also be found in just black printing and blank-backed.